The consolidation of Stalin's rule and responding to the rise of fascism in Europe (1930–1939)
from 1932, with the
Three Arrows symbol representing resistance against
reactionary conservatism,
Nazism and
Stalinism, alongside the slogan "Against
Papen,
Hitler,
Thälmann" During the 1930s, critics of Stalin, both inside and outside the Soviet Union, were under heavy attack by the party. According to historian,
Bernhard H. Bayerlein, the increasingly "repressive transformation" of the Communist movement "strengthened intermediate oppositionist and anti-Stalinist currents” in the left. Outside the Communist movement, for example, the
International Revolutionary Marxist Centre was founded in 1932 as an international association of left-wing parties which rejected both more moderate mainstream
social democracy and the Stalinist
Third International. mural (
Man, Controller of the Universe) depicts Trotsky with Marx and Engels as a true champion of the workers' struggle. While defending the Russian Revolution from outside aggression,
Leon Trotsky and his followers at the same time urged an anti-bureaucratic
political revolution against
Stalinism to be conducted by the Soviet working class themselves. In 1936, Trotsky called for the restoration of the right of criticism in areas such as
economic matters, the revitalization of the
trade unions and the free elections of the
Soviet parties. Trotsky also opposed the policy of forced collectivisation under Stalin and favoured a
voluntary, gradual approach towards
agricultural production with greater tolerance for the rights of
Soviet Ukrainians. From 1936, Trotsky and his American supporter
James P. Cannon described the Soviet Union as a "
degenerated workers' state", the revolutionary gains of which should be defended against imperialist aggression despite the emergence of a gangster-like ruling stratum, the party bureaucracy. The
Great Purge occurred from 1936 to 1938 as a result of growing internal tensions between the critics of Stalin but eventually turned into an all-out cleansing of "anti-Soviet elements". A majority of those targeted were peasants and minorities, but anarchists and democratic socialist opponents were also targeted for their criticisms of the
severely repressive political techniques that Stalin used. The Soviet leadership switched to a
popular front policy in 1933, in which Communists were expected to work with liberal and even conservative allies to defend against an expected fascist assault. Although Communists and their
fellow travellers in CP-dominated
front organisations played a major role in the anti-fascist movement after 1933,
Enzo Traverso and other historians have argued that the historiography has often obscured the role of the anti-Stalinist left: “it was possible to be both antifascist and anti-Stalinist, and... the fascination exercised by Stalinism at this time over the antifascist intelligentsia was not irresistible." One of the most conflicts of the time was the
Spanish Civil War. While the whole left fought alongside the
Republican faction, within it there were sharp conflicts between the Communists, on the one hand, and anarchists, Trotskyists and the
POUM (the Spanish affiliate of the International Revolutionary Marxist Centre) on the other. Support for the latter became a key issue for the anti-Stalinist left internationally, as exemplified by the
ILP Contingent in the
International Brigades,
George Orwell's book
Homage to Catalonia, the periodical
Spain and the World, and various pamphlets by
Emma Goldman,
Rudolf Rocker and others. Illustrating the role of the anti-Stalinist left in the anti-fascist movement, historian Jonathan Hyslop gives the example of the "Antwerp Group" of former Communist activists in the
International Transport Workers' Federation, led by
Hermann Knüfken. This group sent fighters to Spain, where they joined an
international militia linked to the
UGT union federation, but were expelled by the group’s Communst Party leader,
Hans Beimler, over political differences, whereupon they joined the anarchist
Durruti Column.) and
Carlo Rosselli (who founded the
Giustizia e Libertà anti-fascist group and then fought in Spain as the leader, with
Camillo Berneri of the
Matteotti Battalion, a mixed volunteer unit of anarchist,
liberal, socialist and Communist Italians). In other countries too, non-Communist left parties competed with Stalinism as the same time as they fought the right. The
Three Arrows symbol was adopted by the German
Social Democrats to signify this multi-pronged conflict. == Mid-century critiques (1939–1953) ==